Monday, October 31, 2016

Tuesday November 1 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Next “Bad Bank” to IPO in Spain, after 2 Prior IPOs Imploded - (www.wolfstreet.com) “There will be no Bad Bank in Spain, and we will establish procedures that will not be burdensome for taxpayers.” Those were the infamous words of Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy during the first few months of 2012. Months later Spain’s bad bank, Sareb, was born, and Spanish taxpayers were left holding the tab for the biggest bank bailout in Spanish history. When Sareb was created, its creators assured Spain’s taxpayers that their money would be returned; some even claimed that the State would make a tidy profit from the operation. Since then, the losses have kept piling up. It is estimated that over €2.1 billion of public funds have been poured into the bank so far and a further €2 billion was provisioned for this year’s accounts alone.

Twitter to slash 9% of its workforce and kill Vine as it tries to eke out a profit - (www.latimes.com) Twitter Inc. plans to lay off a few hundred employees, mostly in sales and marketing, and shut down its Vine video app as the social media service strives to produce an annual profit for the first time next year. Initiatives such as streaming live video of NFL games are helping boost ad sales at Twitter, but not quickly enough to justify what investors and analysts have complained is a bloated workforce out of sync with the company's prospects. Several other firms, including Salesforce.com Inc. and Walt Disney Co., have considered and then rejected the opportunity to acquire Twitter in recent weeks.

"World's Most Bearish Hedge Fund" Shuts Emerging Markets Unit After 17% Loss - (www.zerohedge.com) We had previously dubbed Horseman Capital the world's most bearish hedge fund for one reason: as recently as a few months ago the firm's Global Fund had taken its net equity short position to an unprecedented -100%. Horseman is now in the news once again as it is liquidating an emerging markets focused hedge fund following losses totaling 17% this year and difficulties raising capital, according to a letter sent to investors.

Half of Obamacare customers cut back on care to manage costs - (www.cnbc.com) Obamacare customers are acting more cost-conscious than other people with insurance — and it could be affecting their health. A new survey finds that 50 percent of people who buy health plans through government-run Obamacare marketplaces say they cut back on getting health care services as they try to manage costs. That can include not going to the doctor as often when they're sick, skipping preventative care visits and lab tests, and delaying elective surgeries. In contrast, just 33 percent of all people with any form of insurance report cutting back on health care to manage costs, according to the survey by GfK, a marketing and customer research firm. The same survey found that Obamacare marketplace customers with lower incomes, less than $25,000 annually, are much more likely to use what are often lower-cost urgent care facilities and "minute clinics" to get health services than Obamacare customers with higher earnings.

Deutsche Bank warns of tough times ahead as braces for U.S. fine - (www.reuters.com) Deutsche Bank chief John Cryan pledged to redouble restructuring efforts on Thursday, warning that the bank faces tough times ahead as it finalizes talks with U.S. justice authorities over a multi-billion dollar fine. Germany's biggest lender earlier posted an unexpected quarterly profit, benefiting from a modest rebound in bond trading, but failed to dispel the cloud of uncertainty that drove clients to withdraw billions of euros. Cryan said on a conference call that the quarter had been overshadowed by talks over the U.S. Department of Justice’s settlement proposal relating to sales of RMBS (residential mortgage-backed securities) which had caused uncertainty.



ECB's Nowotny says December meet will decide on QE, what assets to buy if prolonged
China September industrial profit growth slows, signals fragile recovery
- (www.reuters.com)
BOJ won't try to push down super-long yields: Kuroda
- (www.reuters.com)

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Monday October 31 20916 Housing and Economic stories


“Tech” Malaise Pricks San Francisco Office Space Bubble - (www.wolfstreet.com) The rumored second round of layoffs at Twitter – which in 2011 was granted by the befuddled city of San Francisco the “Twitter tax break” on employment taxes – comes at a very inopportune moment for the glory of commercial real estate. These layoffs would amount to 8% to Twitter’s workforce, or about 300 people, according to Bloomberg. Already, Twitter has thrown 183,642 square feet of vacant office space at its two-building Mid-Market headquarters on the sublease market, thus bringing it to 1.51 million square feet (msf). This comes at a time when, according to the “snapshot” from Cushman & Wakefield, leasing activity nearly ground to a halt in the third quarter, with only 875,000 sf leased – the lowest since 2001!

 

Chinese Bank Liabilities Rise Above 200 Trillion Yuan For The First Time - (www.zerohedge.com) By now it is widely accepted that the biggest credit risk facing the global financial system is not so much among western banks, which have been closely scrutinized, and their balance sheets are largely exposed to both regulators and the public (perhaps with a few notable exceptions), but are arising from China. And while China's total leverage, by most counts, is somewhere in the 300% range, according to the IFF... ... and modestly lower according to other sources, the real worry is not so much the sovereign or corporate non-financial debt within China, but the leverage within its opaque, murky financial system. What we do know about China's banks is what the government discloses, which is not much, however overnight China's Banking Regulatory Commission reported on its website the latest amount of total domestic assets on China's bank books: as of September the number is a stunning CNY217.3 trillion, or just over $32 trillion. 

Ratings Inflation Is Back, Subprime Style - (www.bloomberg.com) A decade after the triple-A failures of the subprime era, grade inflation is back on Wall Street. This time, Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings Inc. are cutting companies slack on mergers and acquisitions, an analysis of credit-ratings data by Bloomberg News found. Over the past year and a half, both have bumped up their ratings by two, three or even six levels on a majority of the biggest deals, the analysis found. Moody’s and S&P don’t dispute those findings, which are based on ratings guidelines posted on their websites. But the firms say a by-the-numbers approach overlooks one of their most valuable assets: human judgment. Both make clear that their analysts have leeway to nudge ratings up or down, based on a company’s track record and their confidence in management’s commitment to reduce indebtedness.

EXCLUSIVE: 2/3 Of Doctors Say Obamacare Hurts Quality And Cost Of Healthcare - (www.dailycaller.com) The nation’s doctors have spoken, and they say Obamacare must go, according to a new survey. Nearly two-thirds — 65.98 percent — of the 587 physicians surveyed say Congress should repeal and replace Obamacare, according to a survey by Jackson & Coker. Just over 60 percent of physicians surveyed were opposed to Obamacare when the bill passed in 2010. After six years of Obamacare, that percentage has raised to 62.42 percent. The overwhelming majority of physicians said that Obamacare has negatively impacted their “compensation, workload, treatment decision-making ability, and practice.” Over 50 percent of physicians said that the Obamacare system has had a negative impact on both the quality and cost of care patients receive nationwide.

Subprime Early Payment Defaults Are Back... in Credit Cards  - (www.wsj.com) Credit-card lending to subprime borrowers is starting to backfire. Missed payments on credit cards that lenders issued recently are higher than on older cards, according to new data from credit bureau TransUnion. Nearly 3% of outstanding balances on credit cards issued in 2015 were at least 90 days behind on payments six months after they were originated. That compares with 2.2% for cards that were given out in 2014 and 1.5% for cards in 2013. The poorer performance on newer cards pushed up the 90-day or more delinquency rate for all credit cards to 1.53% on average nationwide in the third quarter. That’s the highest level since 2012.




Thursday, October 27, 2016

Friday October 28 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Venezuela Escapes Bankruptcy for Now… But Oil Production Continues To Plunge - (www.wolfstreet.com) Venezuela just dodged a bullet, pulling off a last minute bond swap with creditors. The deal only buys Venezuela a little bit of breathing room, and a default at some point next year or the year after is not out of the question. Either way, the South American OPEC nation’s oil production is falling and will only continue on a downward trajectory. Venezuela’s state-owned PDVSA avoided default at the eleventh hour, getting enough creditors onboard for a debt swap. The oil company had repeatedly offered creditors to exchange debt set to mature this year and in 2017 for payments spread out over the rest of the decade, a proposal that would allow the company – and the sovereign government – to technically avoid default.

Most Crowded Trade in Bonds Is a Powder Keg Ready to Blow - (www.bloomberg.com) The hottest craze in fixed income is at risk of overheating. A headlong rush into higher-yielding, long-term bonds in recent years has created one of the most crowded trades in financial markets. Investors seeking relief from central banks’ zero-interest-rate policies have poured into government debt due in a decade or more, swelling the amount worldwide by a record $733 billion this year. It’s more than doubled since 2009 to about $6 trillion, data compiled by Bloomberg and Bank of America Corp. show. Now money managers overseeing more than $1 trillion say the case for owning longer maturities -- stellar performers for most of 2016 -- is crumbling. 

US govt says benchmark 2017 Healthcare.gov premiums up 25 pct - (www.reuters.com) The average premium for benchmark 2017 Obamacare insurance plans sold on Healthcare.gov rose 25 percent compared with 2016, the U.S. government said on Monday, the biggest increase since the insurance first went on sale in 2013 for the following year. The average monthly premium for the benchmark plan is rising to $302 from $242 in 2016, the Department of Health and Human Services said. The agency attributed the large increase to insurers adjusting their premiums to reflect two years of cost data that became available. Large national insurers, including Aetna Inc, UnitedHealth Group Inc and Anthem Inc, have said they are losing money on the exchanges, created under President Barack Obama's national healthcare reform law, because patient costs are higher than anticipated. Both UnitedHealth and Aetna have pulled out of the exchanges for 2017.

More Bad News For Phiadelphia: Obamacare Premiums Set To Soar More Than 50% - (www.zerohedge.com) When the Affordable Care Act open enrollment period begins next week customers will see some changes, including fewer choices and higher prices. In Pennsylvania, the number of insurers in the marketplace has gone from 13 to eight. But the worst fate is set to befall the city that famously booed Santa Claus, Philadelphia, where CBS reports that just two insurers are left and premiums are expected to rise 53%.

China orders regulators to curb property lending - (www.ft.com) China is introducing a slew of new restrictions on property-related lending, as the central government takes the lead in efforts to head off a housing bubble. Property developers are facing curbs on their ability to raise financing by issuing debt or equity, after two government regulators were instructed to step in, it has emerged. The China Securities Regulatory Commission and the National Development and Reform Commission — China’s economic planner — have been instructed by high-level officials to restrict developers’ issuances in the Hong Kong stock market, in the Hong Kong bond market and in the Chinese interbank bond market, according to local news magazine Caixin. The news comes less than a week after the Shanghai Stock Exchange froze all bond issuances by property developers. Securities dealers told local media last Wednesday that they have been told to await tighter rules on which companies can issue debt. The exchange is drawing up the new rules under the supervision of the national securities regulator.


Euro Gripes Threaten Economic Recovery as Populism Advances - (www.bloomberg.com)

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Thursday October 27 20916 Housing and Economic stories


Subprime Credit Card Surge Pushing Up Missed Payments - (www.wsj.com) Credit-card lending to subprime borrowers is starting to backfire. Missed payments on credit cards that lenders issued recently are higher than on older cards, according to new data from credit bureau TransUnion. Nearly 3% of outstanding balances on credit cards issued in 2015 were at least 90 days behind on payments six months after they were originated. That compares with 2.2% for cards that were given out in 2014 and 1.5% for cards in 2013. The poorer performance on newer cards pushed up the 90-day or more delinquency rate for all credit cards to 1.53% on average nationwide in the third quarter. That’s the highest level since 2012.

Sputtering Startups Weigh on U.S. Economic Growth - (www.wsj.com) The U.S. economy is inching along, productivity is flagging and millions of Americans appear locked out of the labor market. One key factor intertwined with this loss of dynamism: The U.S. is creating startup businesses at historically low rates. The American economy has long relied on fast-growing young companies to fuel job growth and spread the latest innovations. As recently as the 1980s and 1990s, a small number of young firms disproportionately contributed to U.S. employment growth, helping allocate workers and resources to burgeoning segments of the economy. But government data shows a decadeslong slowdown in entrepreneurship. 

Fake Divorce Is Path to Riches in China’s Hot Real Estate Market - (www.bloomberg.com) Earlier this year, Mr. and Mrs. Cai, a couple from Shanghai, decided to end their marriage. The rationale wasn’t irreconcilable differences; rather, it was a property market bubble. The pair, who operate a clothing shop, wanted to buy an apartment for 3.6 million yuan ($532,583), adding to three places they already own. But the local government had begun, among other bubble-fighting measures, to limit purchases by existing property holders. So in February, the couple divorced.  “Why would we worry about divorce? We’ve been married for so long,” said Cai, the husband, who requested that the couple’s full names not be used to avoid potential legal trouble. “If we don’t buy this apartment, we’ll miss the chance to get rich.”

Santoli: Overcrowded ETF market headed for a shakeout - (www.cnbc.com) ETFs are the smartphone apps of the investing world. It's hard to imagine how we used to get by without them. They are remarkably cheap to create and own. A small handful of the most popular ones dominate usage. There are new ones arriving weekly targeting every narrow interest. And there are far, far too many of them. In a bit more than 20 years, exchange-traded funds have gone from an innovation no one was asking for ("Why would anyone want to trade a mutual fund in the middle of the day?") to the dominant new-product category in retail investment management. 

Smartwatch is Dead, Market Implodes, Apple Watch Shipments Collapse - (www.wolfstreet.com) We have pooh-poohed the media love story about Apple Watch and similar devices when they first came out. We were particularly amused by how Apple was able to dominate entire front pages of the fawning financial press when it introduced the watch. At the time, nothing else mattered or happened. That was March 9, 2015. I took some screenshots, showing how great Apple really is in wrapping the media around its cordless Magic Trackpad… Apple Comes Out with a Watch, and Look What Happens: But even with all our cynicism about this sort of hype, we did not expect the market to just implode like this, and for Apple Watch shipments to just totally collapse. But they did. In the third quarter, according to International Data Corporation (IDC), global smartwatch shipments plunged 51.6% year-over-year. “A round of growing pains,” as IDC put it. Just 2.7 million of these devices were shipped, down from 5.6 million a year ago.




Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Wednesday October 26 20916 Housing and Economic stories


How the Ballooning “Pension Crisis” Will Impact the Economy - (www.wolfstreet.com) In the very simplest terms, the Dallas Police & Fire Pension Fund is going broke, and the police who are counting on it for their retirement are beginning to panic. Police involved are retiring as early as possible and taking cash payouts because they fear that the fund will run dry and future checks may not be forthcoming. The whole thing is beginning to look like a run on a bank and it is just making matters worse. It’s not that the DPFP is all that different from most of the public and private retirement funds; it’s just that what is happening has been noticed and made the headlines. When you consider the number of people involved and the amount of money involved, the Dallas Police Retirement Fund is pretty insignificant considering that retirement funds in places like Chicago and the State of Illinois are probably in as bad a shape. Then there is the big daddy of all retirement funds, the Social Security Trust Fund.

Bankruptcy Bust: How Zombie Companies Are Killing the Oil Rally - (www.nasdaq.com) Their owners may be bankrupt, but the sprawling mines of Wyoming's Powder River Basin are still churning out coal. It is the same story in oil fields along the Gulf Coast and with shale-gas wells in the Rocky Mountains. Energy investors have long hoped that falling prices would solve themselves by driving producers into bankruptcy and stanching the flood of excess supply. It turns out that while bankruptcy filings are up, they have barely impacted fossil-fuel markets. The theory that bankruptcies would help balance the market "was misguided to begin with," says Roy Martin, a research analyst at energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie. "And people are starting to come around to that now."

Banks preparing to leave UK over Brexit, says banking body chief executive - (www.reuters.com) Big international banks are preparing to move some of their operations out of Britain in early 2017 due to the uncertainty over the country's future relationship with the European Union, a top banking official said. Writing in the Observer newspaper, Anthony Browne, the chief executive of lobby group the British Bankers' Association, said the public and political debate was "taking us in the wrong direction" and businesses could not wait until the last minute. "Most international banks now have project teams working out which operations they need to move to ensure they can continue serving customers, the date by which this must happen, and how best to do it," said Browne.

Texas hospital reaches settlement with nurse infected with Ebola - (www.bloomberg.com) A nurse who contracted the Ebola virus while treating the first person diagnosed with the deadly disease in the United States has reached a settlement with the Dallas hospital where she was in a team caring for the man, a statement on Monday said. Terms of the deal between the hospital's owner, Texas Health Resources, and nurse Nina Pham, the first person infected with Ebola in the United States, were not disclosed. Pham sued last year, saying that Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital did not do enough to prevent her from contracting the deadly virus and invaded her privacy after she was diagnosed with it.

German Momentum Grows for Curbs on Chinese Overseas Investment - (www.bloomberg.com) Germany is seeking tighter control over foreign investment in European companies, in a sign of a growing protectionist reaction to China’s appetite for overseas acquisitions. Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel on Monday reopened a review of the takeover of Aixtron SE, which supplies equipment to the semiconductor industry, by China’s Grand Chip Investment GmbH. That follows calls by Gabriel, who is also Chancellor Angela Merkel’s deputy, for European Union measures to give national governments more powers to block or impose conditions on shareholdings of non-EU companies.



Monday, October 24, 2016

Tuesday October 25 20916 Housing and Economic stories


China House Price Bubble Soars Most Ever, Government Freaks out, Preannounces Plunge - (www.wolfstreet.com) As a consequence of a dizzying buying frenzy in September, the average price of new homes in China soared 11.2% from a year ago, after a 9.2% jump in August, the National Bureau of Statistics reported today. It was the 12th month in a row of year-over-year gains, and the largest increase on record. The average price of new homes rose in 63 of the 70 cities in the index. It dropped in six cities and remained flat in one. But all heck broke lose in tier-one cities: In Beijing, the average price skyrocketed 27.8%, in Shanghai 32.7%. This comes after authorities have unleashed a tsunami of liquidity that triggered a record borrowing binge. In response to the prior deflation of China’s house price bubble, and the social unrest it began to entail as folks saw their life savings evaporate, the People’s Bank of China cut interest rates six times in the eleven months leading up to October 2015. The benchmark mortgage rate dropped to a historic low of 4.9%. Last month, the medium- and long-term loans to households, mostly mortgages, ballooned by 571 billion yuan, as the total value of new homes sold (a function of price and volume), according to Bloomberg calculations, soared 61% year-over-year, nearly double the increase in August.

Head Of Democratic Party Makes Stunning Admission: "The People Are In Despair About How Things Are" - (www.zerohedge.com) While readers may be used to tin-foil-hat-wearing digitial dickweeds and alt-right bloggers seeing through the veil of ignorance and media hype that hides a considerably uglier economic reality than The White House (and the stock market) might suggest, many Democrats may be shocked to discover that none other than now-acting chair of the Democratic National Committee Donna Brazile agrees...
In an email to Clinton campaign chair John Podesta from February 2016, released Friday by WikiLeaks... Donna Brazile (who has had a tough week trying to defend her cheating allegations for giving Hillary debate questions) admits... “I think people are more in despair about how things are - yes new jobs but they are low wage jobs... HOUSING is a huge issue. Most people pay half of what they make to rent,” Such honesty from such a vocal and public cheerleader for the Obama administration is sure to embarrass the White House, and, as Lifezette notes, contradicts the official Democratic Party line that Obama is some sort of economy-saving superhero.

Germany’s Long-Suffering Savers Have Real Cause to Complain – (www.bloomberg.com) In Germany, fretting about inflation is a political currency that never seems to lose its value. In the past week, for example, at least three national newspapers have run prominent articles telling the populace that their savings -- denied the magic of compound interest by the European Central Bank’s low-rate policies -- are in for a renewed onslaught from accelerating consumer prices. The Bundesbank forecasts average inflation of 1.5 percent next year, whereas rates will likely be around zero. Business daily Handelsblatt, which in March ran a mocked-up front-page picture of ECB President Mario Draghi burning up a 100-euro note with a cigar wedged in his mouth, published a cover headline on Friday proclaiming that Germany is about to get caught in an “inflation trap.”

Is Chicago’s Housing Market Next?  - (www.wolfstreet.com) Is Chicago’s Housing Market Next? The smart money tries to cash out at the peak, no? Does it always start at the top? Because there’s just no letup in dismal tidbits piling up about big-city high-end condo market: Manhattan, San Francisco, Miami – and now Chicago too? Just last year, things were still so good on the Magnificent Mile, those tony 13 blocks of Michigan Avenue from the Chicago River north to Oak Street, of landmark towers, shops and restaurants – rents rank among the most expensive in the country – museums, hotels, and high-end condos. April last year, the 65th-floor penthouse at the Park Tower on 800 N. Michigan Ave sold for $18.75 million, “to a firm with ties to ‘Star Wars’ creator George Lucas and wife Mellody Hobson, president of a Chicago investment firm,” the Chicago Tribune speculated. It was an all-time record. The real estate business was ecstatic. But it might have marked the peak. Now another penthouse at the Park Tower – a 4,000 sq. ft. two-bedroom – is for sale, asking $12 million, according to the Financial Times. A $7.5 million four-bedroom three-bathroom condo is for sale at the Art Deco Palmolive Building at the north end of the Mag Mile. Other lesser condos are for sale galore in the area.

WikiLeaks: Hillary Wants ObamaCare to 'Unravel' - Fox Nation - (www.foxnews.com) An email leaked by WikiLeaks Tuesday appears to suggest that Hillary Clinton wants the Affordable Care Act to fail — presumably as a pretense for implementing single-payer, government-controlled health care. In a chain between Clinton and her senior policy adviser Ann O’Leary titled “Memo on Cadillac Tax for HRC,” Clinton said she’s open to changing her position on the Cadillac Tax — but that the Republican plan to repeal it must pass.